Jason Wilson claims “the structure of a story can relate its author and the ideological system” of the story itself (33).
Evaluating the structure of “When I Heard a Learn’d Astronomer” this is demonstrated. The poem can be broken down into two sections splitting directly down the middle; the first four lines and the last four lines. These sections can be categorized just as Linda Wagner-Martin labeled two sections of the poem “Laying the Dust. ” She called the first section a “simple happening” while the latter is a result of the happening being called “from this experience, the poet concludes” (45).
To begin the speaker of the poem describes the instruction he is receiving from the “learn’d astronomer” simply and with minimal interest. The word “When” introducing the first line of every line in the first section unifies the idea of boredom the speaker has throughout that entire section. Parallel structure is applied while describing the learn’d astronomer’s visual aids such as: the proofs, the figures, the charts, the diagrams and so on. This type of structure is used to lengthen the time of the lecture and quantify the amount of visual aids the learned astronomer has with him.
Action words, as a result of the first half of the poem, are evident throughout the second section of the poem such as: the speaker rises, glides, wanders and so forth. The structure of the poem helps to present the message of knowledge comes by experience and initiative. Constant contrast are unmistakable in the poem convince the reader of the difference between the lecture and the evening with nature. Richard S. Calhoun describes paradoxes as the “central argument in poetry” (pars. 15).
The Essay on Lines Of The Poem Father Line Speaker
Sharon Olds' poem "Late Poem to My Father" exposes the profound effect that childhood trauma can have on someone, even in adulthood. The speaker of the poem invokes sadness and pity in the reader by reflecting on the traumatic childhood of her father, and establishes a cause and effect relationship between the abuse he endured as a child and the dependence he develops on alcohol as an adult. The ...
Reflecting back on the beginning of the poem the speaker states that he is being lectured by a learn’d astronomer.
Calhoun’s description is validated concerning the speaker who does not gain knowledge of astronomy from the learn’d astronomer. When describing the atmosphere of the speaker’s learning environment Whitman states the learn’d astronomer lectured in the lecture-room. Other words such as “instruct” or even “teach” indicate the same as lecture but repetition, prolonging the moment, suggests the lecture’s monotony. In the next line of the poem it states, “How soon unaccountable I became,” as a product of the lecture (line 5).
The learning experience and how the speaker felt contrasts heavily with the atmosphere the speaker experienced being outdoors. Wagner-Martin states “silence can go beyond the effectiveness of sound” (56).
Outdoors there was not a person talking let alone lecturing but there was “perfect silence” (8).
Lastly, the speaker sharply contrasts the description of the lecture-room to the outdoors. With all of the items mentioned with the lecturer, the lecture-room may be imagined cluttered or busy by the reader but the speaker outside in the primitive world signifies room and space.
Throughout the poem, word choice is significant using denotation and connotation to fully understand the rationale behind why those words were chosen. Beginning with the title “When I Heard a Learn’d Astronomer,” the word “Heard” does not denote understanding or knowledge but merely as it is defined “to perceive by ear. ” The next word in the title is “Learn’d. ” A person who is learned indicates a highly educated person but the speaker uses slang or not the grammatically correct version of the word to describe someone as learned.
Calhoun states “form and content are regarded as inseparable” by varying the word learned to “Learn’d” it changes the quality of knowledge from the “Learn’d Astronomer. ” In the poem, during the lecture, the speaker becomes “tired and sick” (5).
Although “tired” is commonly used to express someone who is over taken by boredom, the word “sick” illustrates the level of abhorrence the speaker was experiencing. After the speaker leaves the classroom, the tone of the poem shifts from dreadful to dreamy as he wanders off by himself in the “mystical” night air from “time to time” (7).
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Upon viewing Thomas Eakins' "The Swimming Hole", I find that I am clearly able to see the words of Walt Whitman's Section 11 of Song Of Myself as if the language of the poem literally brushed the paint onto the canvas. This beautiful piece of art is exactly the visual picture one gets when reading the poem about the "woman" watching the beautiful, naked, young men frolic in and around the swimming ...
Ending the poem,”Look’d up in perfect silence at the stars” implies the speaker is content and full of wisdom from just looking at the stars (8).
Wagner-Martin suggests “silence surrounds the facts” and “it can permit people to truly know what they are seeing” (56).
Once the speaker left the lecture-room and went outdoors, he became aware to all of the knowledge that was around him. The advantage of New Criticism allows literary works to be analyzed separately without common influences so that readers can determine their own meaning of the literary work.